Once upon a time, long, long ago, videogames had incredibly tough puzzles and there was NO INTERNET! Terrifying, I know. You had to work at puzzles and really bang your head against the walls until you figured them out. One of my favorite games of the NES era (though ultimately
Jurassic World Evolution 2 was probably the one game this year that I have been most excited for and boy it didn’t disappoint. Launching on November 9th, the game follows in the footsteps of its wildly popular predecessor, Jurassic World Evolution, which sucked countless hours of my life away.
When I was first shown Call Of Duty: Vanguard back in August, I went with a quote from former English prime minister Winston Churchill for my subtitle given his importance to the war efforts. The above subtitle is another quote from World War II, spoken by General Douglas MacArthur, but
New World is one of the most confounding MMO’s. It’s equally frustrating and fascinating. It’s exasperating yet compelling. It draws you in, then pushes you out. There is so much wrong with New World, but it is magically – I genuinely mean magically – held up by possibility; the
God is dead. 18 years ago, Lucifer defeated the Creator, and brought about the Da’at; a barren world which yearns for a Nahobino as its ruler. However, in His last breath, God safeguarded Tokyo, where humans now live oblivious to the true state of the universe. One of these
Imagine driving your favorite vehicle but you’re racing someone in a giant monster truck. Two more trucks show up and they’re not just racing you, they’re doing flips and entertaining you while you race them to the finish line. Then once the race is over, you’re
Thomas Kane, the only son of the famous Kane Illusionists, has gone missing. Try as they might, Scotland Yard seems unable to locate him and the investigation has all but ground to a halt. Unable to cope with Kane’s disappearance, Emma, an insightful ten-year-old, decides to visit his mansion
I continue to find cloud gaming on Switch fascinating. I’ve reviewed a majority of the cloud titles so far (sometimes in other editors’ reviews), and despite my often lamented, terrible internet, I generally find them to be great ways to play games that otherwise wouldn’t be on the